Skip to content

Seattle Culture

12 Simple Ways to Add Color to Your Outdoor Space

Bring your landscape to life with colorful details such as furniture, pots and plantings

By Noelle Johnson, Houzz May 24, 2016

A group of colorful adirondack chairs around a fire pit.
A group of colorful adirondack chairs around a fire pit.

This article originally appeared on Houzz.com.

Injecting color into the landscape doesn’t have to be difficult or a budget-buster — and color can come from a variety of sources. In furniture, garden art, paint, pots, tile and, of course, plants, the impact color has on the landscape cannot be understated. Here are 12 simple ways that you can add refreshing hues outside.

1. Select colorful outdoor furniture. Sitting areas and tables often serve as focal points in the landscape, which makes them great places to add color. As a less expensive option, trade in tan and brown cushions for new ones in eye-catching colors or add pillows to your existing seat cushion.

2. Bring in colorful pots. One of the easiest ways to create a more colorful garden is to incorporate containers in shades of blue, magenta, orange, purple or even red. This is an opportunity to create a striking color variation. Here you can see the dramatic contrast of orange marigolds in a blue or purple pot.

Pairing colorful containers with plants prized for their foliage, such as herbs, hostas (Hosta spp.) and succulents, is another easy way to create vibrant interest in the landscape. Planters can also provide badly needed color in a shady front entry where flowers won’t grow but a nice green shade-loving plant will.

Boulder, CO

3. Add an outdoor rug to your deck or patio. Don’t overlook the opportunity to add interest at ground level by bringing in a rug with a pleasing design in shades that will enhance your outdoor dining or seating areas.

Dallas, TX: Sara & Rocky Garza

4. Paint a wall in an eye-catching color. A can of paint and a couple of hours are all it takes to infuse the landscape with a rich hue. Paint an exterior or garden wall for a dramatic difference.

Here we see common sotol (Dasylirion wheeleri) and Santa Rita prickly pear (Opuntia santa-rita) planted in front of a colorful wall.

Colored walls in the garden

When selecting a paint color, choose one that will complement the surrounding area, including outdoor furniture and plants. A color wheel can help you decide whether to go with a complementary or analogous color.

Related: What to Know about Adding a Deck

While some homeowners associations don’t allow brightly colored walls on building exteriors, you may be able to paint parts of the landscape not visible from the road.

5. Incorporate decorative tiles. Tile comes in many different colors and designs, which makes it a great material to add color to outdoor structures such as stairs, kitchen countertops or water features, or it can be used to create a mural.

Spanish Revival

 

Related: Find Colorful Adirondack Chairs on Houzz

6. Use colorful outdoor decor. Garden art can handle the weather extremes of the outdoors while adding interest to the landscape. Examples include colorful steppingstones, mosaic art and the popular Talavera pottery, to name just a few.

Blue and green glass beads add an unexpected dash of color along this flagstone pathway.

Colorful garden

7. Brighten up a bare wall with a mural. This is an especially helpful tip if space is limited, as a mural takes up no ground space and adds both color and interest to an outdoor wall. Whether you add plants to the landscape by painting them on the wall or create the illusion of a framed piece of art, a mural can be a great way to dress up the outdoors.

8. Decorate the outdoors with colorful, flower-filled pots. Another one of the easiest and most fulfilling ways to add color to the outdoors is to incorporate flowering plants in containers. These miniature gardens not only beautify their surroundings, but they can also be moved to other locations and changed out seasonally to whatever suits you at a given time.

Hanging flower baskets add color at a higher level and can be used to frame a view from a window.

9. Add color toward an entry with flowering plants. A group of flowering plants draws the eye toward an entry — and can also increase curb appeal. You can do this by adding pots filled with flowering annuals or creating a bed filled with blooming plants in the front yard. In this garden, a raised bed has been created out of a retaining wall and filled with pink geraniums.

Colorful garden

A bed filled with colorful plants guides the eye toward the front entry here.

Flowering perennials add color to entries in arid gardens. Angelita daisy (Tetraneuris acaulis) and Parry’s penstemon (Penstemon parryi) planted next to a boulder help to create a colorful entry here.

10. Add flowers to your vegetable beds. Plant cosmos, marigolds and nasturtiums in with your vegetables. Seasonal favorites such as sweet alyssum, lobelia, petunias and violas also do well in vegetable gardens. They not only add lovely color but attract pollinators.

Nasturtiums bloom among vegetables like tomatoes, peppers and broccoli in this East Coast garden.

11. Look beyond flowers to plants with vibrant foliage. Colorful foliage isn’t limited to fall. Many plants provide year-round color other than green through their foliage for dramatic interest long after the flowers have faded.

Related: Revamp Your Patio with a New Outdoor Rug

12. Look for new areas to add color. Take a few minutes to walk through your garden and try to see it through a different set of eyes — you can also ask a friend to do this for you. You may discover a new area to add plants.

Contemporary Landscape

A parking strip can be converted into a wildflower bed or planted with perennial flowers for a welcome patch of color.

 

Follow Us

Where Function Meets Finesse

Where Function Meets Finesse

Without the use of a single brick, Little House turns the tables on the Big Bad Wolf.

Texas residents John and Julie Connor had spent many summers visiting family near Seabeck, an unincorporated waterfront village and former mill town in Kitsap County. They loved the wildness of the southern Hood Canal and imagined a small retreat here of their own, so they purchased a large lot with lush second-growth trees on a…

Master of Transparency

Master of Transparency

Award-winning architect Eric Cobb’s work seamlessly meshes glass, space and light

Noted architect Eric Cobb is collaborating on a second-home project near The Gorge Amphitheatre with a former junior high school soccer teammate, embodying a classic Seattle story of connection. The new Cliffe Pointe at the Gorge project located within the Cave B Estate grounds features 60 second homes surrounded by vineyards, natural sage, and rolling…

Sandy Sanctuary

Sandy Sanctuary

Mercer Island couple find bliss with a cabana on the beach

With 8,000 lakes, fifth most in the country, Washington is a happy hunting ground for waterfront lots. Highly popular Lake Chelan, the third-deepest lake in the United States, is not on the top of the list of affordable freshwater options, at least not anywhere near Chelan, where scarce waterfront residential lots start at $2 million….

The Space Arranger

The Space Arranger

Kyle Gaffney and SkB take a holistic approach to building design

To say that Kyle Gaffney backed into a career in architecture may be a bit exaggerated, but he did get a late start. Gaffney, a cofounder and principal at Seattle architecture firm SkB, suffered a devastating knee injury and lost a soccer scholarship to the University of Puget Sound. Instead of college he went to…